"""
DataTable.py


INTRODUCTION

This class is useful for representing a table of data arranged by named
columns, where each row in the table can be thought of as a record:

    name   phoneNumber
    ------ -----------
    Chuck  893-3498
    Bill   893-0439
    John   893-5901

This data often comes from delimited text files which typically
have well defined columns or fields with several rows each of which can
be thought of as a record.

Using a DataTable can be as easy as using lists and dictionaries:

    table = DataTable('users.csv')
    for row in table:
        print row['name'], row['phoneNumber']

Or even:

    table = DataTable('users.csv')
    for row in table:
        print '%(name)s %(phoneNumber)s' % row

The above print statement relies on the fact that rows can be treated
like dictionaries, using the column headings as keys.

You can also treat a row like an array:

    table = DataTable('something.tabbed', delimiter='\t')
    for row in table:
        for item in row:
            print item,
        print


COLUMNS

Column headings can have a type specification like so:
    name, age:int, zip:int

Possible types include string, int, float and datetime. However,
datetime is not well supported right now.

String is assumed if no type is specified but you can set that
assumption when you create the table:

        table = DataTable(headings, defaultType='float')

Using types like int and float will cause DataTable to actually
convert the string values (perhaps read from a file) to these types
so that you can use them in natural operations. For example:

    if row['age']>120:
        self.flagData(row, 'age looks high')

As you can see, each row can be accessed as a dictionary with keys
according the column headings. Names are case sensitive.


ADDING ROWS

Like Python lists, data tables have an append() method. You can append
TableRecords, or you pass a dictionary, list or object, in which case a
TableRecord is created based on given values. See the method docs below
for more details.


FILES

By default, the files that DataTable reads from are expected to be
comma-separated value files.

Limited comments are supported: A comment is any line whose very first
character is a #. This allows you to easily comment out lines in your
data files without having to remove them.

Whitespace around field values is stripped.

You can control all this behavior through the arguments found in the
initializer and the various readFoo() methods:

    ...delimiter=',', allowComments=1, stripWhite=1

For example:

    table = DataTable('foo.tabbed', delimiter='\t', allowComments=0, stripWhite=0)

You should access these parameters by their name since additional ones
could appear in the future, thereby changing the order.

If you are creating these text files, we recommend the
comma-separated-value format, or CSV. This format is better defined
than the tab delimited format, and can easily be edited and manipulated
by popular spreadsheets and databases.


TABLES FROM SCRATCH

Here's an example that constructs a table from scratch:

    table = DataTable(['name', 'age:int'])
    table.append(['John', 80])
    table.append({'name': 'John', 'age': 80})
    print table


QUERIES

A simple query mechanism is supported for equality of fields:

    matches = table.recordsEqualTo({'uid': 5})
    if matches:
        for match in matches:
            print match
    else:
        print 'No matches.'


COMMON USES

* Programs can keep configuration and other data in simple comma-
separated text files and use DataTable to access them. For example, a
web site could read it's sidebar links from such a file, thereby
allowing people who don't know Python (or even HTML) to edit these
links without having to understand other implementation parts of the
site.

* Servers can use DataTable to read and write log files.


FROM THE COMMAND LINE

The only purpose in invoking DataTable from the command line is to see
if it will read a file:

> python DataTable.py foo.csv

The data table is printed to stdout.


CACHING

DataTable uses "pickle caching" so that it can read .csv files faster
on subsequent loads. You can disable this across the board with:
    from MiscUtils.DataTable import DataTable
    DataTable.usePickleCache = 0

Or per instance by passing "usePickleCache=0" to the constructor.

See the docstring of PickleCache.py for more information.


MORE DOCS

Some of the methods in this module have worthwhile doc strings to look
at. See below.


TO DO

* Allow callback parameter or setting for parsing CSV records.
* Perhaps TableRecord should inherit UserList and UserDict and override methods as appropriate...?
* Better support for datetime.
* _types and BlankValues aren't really packaged, advertised or
  documented for customization by the user of this module.
* DataTable:
    * Parameterize the TextColumn class.
    * Parameterize the TableRecord class.
    * More list-like methods such as insert()
    * writeFileNamed() is flawed: it doesn't write the table column
      type
    * Should it inherit from UserList?
* Add error checking that a column name is not a number (which could
  cause problems).
* Look for various @@ tags through out the code.

"""


import string, sys
from CSVParser import CSVParser
from string import join, replace, split, strip
from types import *
from MiscUtils import NoDefault
try:
    from mx.DateTime import DateTimeType, DateTimeFrom
except ImportError:
    pass

## Types ##

DateTimeType = "<custom-type 'datetime'>"
ObjectType = "<type 'Object'>"

_types = {
    'string':   StringType,
    'int':      IntType,
    'long':     LongType,
    'float':    FloatType,
    'datetime': DateTimeType,
    'object':   ObjectType,
}


## Classes ##


class DataTableError(Exception):
    pass


class TableColumn:
    """
    A table column represents a column of the table including name and
    type.

    It does not contain the actual values of the column. These are
    stored individually in the rows.
    """

    def __init__(self, spec):

        # spec is a string such as 'name' or 'name:type'
        fields = split(spec, ':')
        if len(fields)>2:
            raise DataTableError, 'Invalid column spec %s' % repr(spec)
        self._name = fields[0]

        if len(fields)==1:
            self._type = None
        else:
            self.setType(fields[1])

    def name(self):
        return self._name

    def type(self):
        return self._type

    def setType(self, type):
        """ Sets the type (by a string containing the name) of the heading. Usually invoked by DataTable to set the default type for columns whose types were not specified. """
        if type==None:
            self._type = None
        else:
            try:
                self._type = _types[type]
            except:
                raise DataTableError, 'Unknown type %s' % repr(type)

    def __repr__(self):
        return '<TableColumn %s with %s at %x>' % (
            repr(self._name), repr(self._type), id(self))

    def __str__(self):
        return self._name


    ## Utilities ##

    def valueForRawValue(self, rawValue):
        """ The rawValue is typically a string or value already of the appropriate type. TableRecord invokes this method to ensure that values (especially strings that come from files) are the correct types (e.g., ints are ints and floats are floats). """
        # @@ 2000-07-23 ce: an if-else ladder? perhaps these should be dispatched messages or a class hier
        if self._type is StringType:
            value = str(rawValue)
        elif self._type is IntType:
            if rawValue=='':
                value = 0
            else:
                value = int(rawValue)
        elif self._type is LongType:
            if rawValue=='':
                value = 0
            else:
                value = long(rawValue)
        elif self._type is FloatType:
            if rawValue=='':
                value = 0.0
            else:
                value = float(rawValue)
        elif self._type is DateTimeType:
            value = DateTimeFrom(rawValue)
        elif self._type is ObjectType:
            value = rawValue
        else:
            raise DataTableError, 'Unknown column type "%s"' % self._type
        return value


class DataTable:
    """
    See the doc string for this module.
    """

    usePickleCache = 1


    ## Init ##

    def __init__(self, filenameOrHeadings=None, delimiter=',', allowComments=1, stripWhite=1, defaultType='string', usePickleCache=None):
        if usePickleCache is None:
            self.usePickleCache = self.usePickleCache  # grab the class-level attr
        else:
            self.usePickleCache = usePickleCache
        if not _types.has_key(defaultType):
            raise DataTableError, 'Unknown type for default type: %s' % repr(defaultType)
        self._defaultType = defaultType
        self._filename = None
        self._headings = []
        self._rows = []
        if filenameOrHeadings:
            if type(filenameOrHeadings) is StringType:
                self.readFileNamed(filenameOrHeadings, delimiter, allowComments, stripWhite)
            else:
                self.setHeadings(filenameOrHeadings)


    ## File I/O ##

    def readFileNamed(self, filename, delimiter=',', allowComments=1, stripWhite=1):
        self._filename = filename
        data = None
        if self.usePickleCache:
            from PickleCache import readPickleCache, writePickleCache
            data = readPickleCache(filename, pickleVersion=1, source='MiscUtils.DataTable')
        if data is None:
            file = open(self._filename, 'r')
            self.readFile(file, delimiter, allowComments, stripWhite)
            file.close()
            if self.usePickleCache:
                writePickleCache(self, filename, pickleVersion=1, source='MiscUtils.DataTable')
        else:
            self.__dict__ = data.__dict__
        return self

    def readFile(self, file, delimiter=',', allowComments=1, stripWhite=1):
        return self.readLines(file.readlines(), delimiter, allowComments, stripWhite)

    def readString(self, string, delimiter=',', allowComments=1, stripWhite=1):
        return self.readLines(split(string, '\n'), delimiter, allowComments, stripWhite)

    def readLines(self, lines, delimiter=',', allowComments=1, stripWhite=1):
        haveReadHeadings = 0
        parse = CSVParser(fieldSep=delimiter, allowComments=allowComments, stripWhitespace=stripWhite).parse
        for line in lines:
            # process a row, either headings or data
            values = parse(line)
            if values:
                if haveReadHeadings:
                    row = TableRecord(self, values)
                    self._rows.append(row)
                else:
                    self.setHeadings(values)
                    self.createNameToIndexMap()
                    haveReadHeadings = 1
        if values is None:
            raise DataTableError, "Unfinished multiline record."
        return self

    def save(self):
        self.writeFileNamed(self._filename)

    def writeFileNamed(self, filename):
        file = open(filename, 'w')
        self.writeFile(file)
        file.close()

    def writeFile(self, file):
        """
        @@ 2000-07-20 ce: This doesn't write the column types (like :int) back out.
        @@ 2000-07-21 ce: It's notable that a blank numeric value gets read as zero and written out that way. Also, values None are written as blanks.
        """

        # write headings
        file.write(join(map(lambda h: str(h), self._headings), ','))
        file.write('\n')

        def ValueWritingMapper(item):
            # So that None gets written as a blank and everything else as a string
            if item is None:
                return ''
            else:
                return str(item)

        # write rows
        for row in self._rows:
            file.write(join(map(ValueWritingMapper, row), ','))
            file.write('\n')

    def commit(self):
        if self._changed:
            self.save()
            self._changed = 0


    ## Headings ##

    def heading(self, index):
        if type(key) is StringType:
            key = self._nameToIndexMap[key]
        return self._headings[index]

    def hasHeading(self, name):
        return self._nameToIndexMap.has_key(name)

    def numHeadings(self):
        return len(self._headings)

    def headings(self):
        return self._headings

    def setHeadings(self, headings):
        """ Headings can be a list of strings (like ['name', 'age:int']) or a list of TableColumns or None. """
        if not headings:
            self._headings = []
        elif type(headings[0]) is StringType:
            self._headings = map(lambda h: TableColumn(h), headings)
        elif isinstance(headings[0], TableColumn):
            self._headings = list(headings)
        for heading in self._headings:
            if heading.type() is None:
                heading.setType(self._defaultType)
        self.createNameToIndexMap()


    ## Row access (list like) ##

    def __len__(self):
        return len(self._rows)

    def __getitem__(self, index):
        return self._rows[index]

    def append(self, object):
        """ If object is not a TableRecord, then one is created, passing the object to initialize the TableRecord. Therefore, object can be a TableRecord, list, dictionary or object. See TableRecord for details. """

        if not isinstance(object, TableRecord):
            object = TableRecord(self, object)
        self._rows.append(object)
        self._changed = 1


    ## Queries ##

    def recordsEqualTo(self, dict):
        records = []
        keys = dict.keys()
        for record in self._rows:
            matches = 1
            for key in keys:
                if record[key]!=dict[key]:
                    matches = 0
                    break
            if matches:
                records.append(record)
        return records


    ## As a string ##

    def __repr__(self):
        # Initial info
        s = ['DataTable: %s\n%d rows\n' % (self._filename, len(self._rows))]

        # Headings
        s.append('     ')
        s.append(join(map(lambda h: str(h), self._headings), ', '))
        s.append('\n')

        # Records
        i = 0
        for row in self._rows:
            s.append('%3d. ' % i)
            s.append(join(map(lambda r: str(r), row), ', '))
            s.append('\n')
            i = i + 1
        return join(s, '')


    ## As a dictionary ##

    def dictKeyedBy(self, key):
        """ Returns a dictionary containing the contents of the table indexed by the particular key. This is useful for tables that have a column which represents a unique key (such as a name, serial number, etc.). """
        dict = {}
        for row in self:
            dict[row[key]] = row
        return dict


    ## Misc access ##

    def filename(self):
        return self._filename

    def nameToIndexMap(self):
        """ Table rows keep a reference to this map in order to speed up index-by-names (as in row['name']). """
        return self._nameToIndexMap


    ## Self utilities ##

    def createNameToIndexMap(self):
        """
        Invoked by self to create the nameToIndexMap after the table's
        headings have been read/initialized.
        """
        map = {}
        for i in range(len(self._headings)):
            map[self._headings[i].name()] = i
        self._nameToIndexMap = map


# @@ 2000-07-20 ce: perhaps for each type we could specify a function to convert from string values to the values of the type

BlankValues = {
    StringType:   '',
    IntType:      0,
    FloatType:    0.0,
    DateTimeType: '',
}


class TableRecord:

    ## Init ##

    def __init__(self, table, values=None):
        """
        Dispatches control to one of the other init methods based on the type of values.  Values can be one of three things:
            1. A TableRecord
            2. A list
            3. A dictionary
            4. Any object responding to hasValueForKey() and valueForKey().
        """
        self._headings = table.headings()
        self._nameToIndexMap = table.nameToIndexMap()
        # @@ 2000-07-20 ce: Take out the headings arg to the init method since we have an attribute for that

        if values is not None:
            valuesType = type(values)
            if valuesType is ListType  or  valuesType is TupleType:
                # @@ 2000-07-20 ce: check for required attributes instead
                self.initFromSequence(values)
            elif valuesType is DictType:
                self.initFromDict(values)
            elif valuesType is InstanceType:
                self.initFromObject(value)
            else:
                raise DataTableError, 'Unknown type for values %s.' % valuesType

    def initFromSequence(self, values):
        if len(self._headings)<len(values):
            raise DataTableError, ('There are more values than headings.\nheadings(%d, %s)\nvalues(%d, %s)' % (len(self._headings), self._headings, len(values), values))
        self._values = []
        numHeadings = len(self._headings)
        numValues = len(values)
        assert numValues<=numHeadings
        for i in range(numHeadings):
            heading = self._headings[i]
            if i>=numValues:
                self._values.append(BlankValues[heading.type()])
            else:
                self._values.append(heading.valueForRawValue(values[i]))

    def initFromDict(self, dict):
        self._values = []
        for heading in self._headings:
            name = heading.name()
            if dict.has_key(name):
                self._values.append(heading.valueForRawValue(dict[name]))
            else:
                self._values.append(BlankValues[heading.type()])

    def initFromObject(self, object):
        """
        The object is expected to response to hasValueForKey(name) and
        valueForKey(name) for each of the headings in the table. It's
        alright if the object returns 0 for hasValueForKey(). In that
        case, a "blank" value is assumed (such as zero or an empty
        string). If hasValueForKey() returns 1, then valueForKey() must
        return a value.
        """
        self._values = []
        for heading in self._headings:
            name = heading.name()
            if object.hasValueForKey(name):
                self._values.append(heading.valueForRawValue(object.valueForKey(name)))
            else:
                self._values.append(BlankValues[heading.type()])


    ## Accessing like a sequence or dictionary ##

    def __len__(self):
        return len(self._values)

    def __getitem__(self, key):
        if type(key) is StringType:
            key = self._nameToIndexMap[key]
        return self._values[key]

    def __setitem__(self, key, value):
        if type(key) is StringType:
            key = self._nameToIndexMap[key]
        self._values[key] = value

    def __repr__(self):
        return '%s' % self._values

    def get(self, key, default=None):
        index = self._nameToIndexMap.get(key, None)
        if index is None:
            return default
        else:
            return self._values[index]

    def has_key(self, key):
        return self._nameToIndexMap.has_key(key)

    def keys(self):
        return self._nameToIndexMap.keys()

    def values(self):
        return self._values

    def items(self):
        items = []
        for key in self.keys():
            items.append((key, self[key]))
        return items


    ## Additional access ##

    def asList(self):
        """
        Returns a sequence whose values are the same at the record's
        and in the order defined by the table.
        """
        # It just so happens that our implementation already has this
        return self._values[:]

    def asDict(self):
        """ Returns a dictionary whose key-values match the table record. """
        dict = {}
        nameToIndexMap = self._nameToIndexMap
        for key in nameToIndexMap.keys():
            dict[key] = self._values[nameToIndexMap[key]]
        return dict


    ## valueForFoo() family ##

    def valueForKey(self, key, default=NoDefault):
        if default is NoDefault:
            return self[key]
        else:
            return self.get(key, default)

    def valueForAttr(self, attr, default=NoDefault):
        return self.valueForKey(attr['Name'], default)



def main(args=None):
    if args is None:
        args = sys.argv
    for arg in args[1:]:
        dt = DataTable(arg)
        print '*** %s ***' % arg
        print dt
        print


if __name__=='__main__':
    main()